Progress in rotational ground-motion observations from explosions and local earthquakes in Taiwan
Abstract
Rotational motions generated by large earthquakes in the far field have been successfully measured, and observations agree well with the classical elasticity theory. However, recent rotational measurements in the near field of earthquakes in Japan and in Taiwan indicate that rotational ground motions are 10 to 100 times larger than expected from the classical elasticity theory. The near-field strong-motion records of the 1999 Mw 7:6 Chi-Chi, Taiwan, earthquake suggest that the ground motions along the 100 km rupture are complex. Some rather arbitrary baseline corrections are necessary in order to obtain reasonable displacement values from double integration of the acceleration data. Because rotational motions can contaminate acceleration observations due to the induced perturbation of the Earth's gravitational field, we started a modest program to observe rotational ground motions in Taiwan. Three papers have reported the rotational observations in Taiwan: (1) at the HGSD station (Liu et al., 2009), (2) at the N3 site from two TAiwan Integrated GEodynamics Research (TAIGER) explosions (Lin et al., 2009), and (3) at the Taiwan campus of the National Chung-Cheng University (NCCU) (Wu et al., 2009). In addition, Langston et al. (2009) reported the results of analyzing the TAIGER explosion data. As noted by several authors before, we found a linear relationship between peak rotational rate (PRR in mrad=sec) and peak ground acceleration (PGA in m/sec2) from local earthquakes in Taiwan, PRR = 0:002 + 1:301 PGA, with a correlation coefficient of 0.988.
Publication Title
Bulletin of the Seismological Society of America
Recommended Citation
Lee, W., Huang, B., Langston, C., Lin, C., Liu, C., Shin, T., Teng, T., & Wu, C. (2009). Progress in rotational ground-motion observations from explosions and local earthquakes in Taiwan. Bulletin of the Seismological Society of America, 99 (2 B), 958-967. https://doi.org/10.1785/0120080205